Cardi B’s daughter Kulture makes her red carpet debut

The pair walk the carpet at Teyana Taylor’s Juneteenth listening party.
June 19, 2020 11:21 a.m. EST
June 23, 2020 12:00 a.m. EST
BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 17: Kulture Kiari Cephus and Cardi B attend the Teyana Taylor "The Album" Listening Party on June 17, 2020 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Rich Fury/Getty Images for Def Jam Recordings) BEVERLY HILLS, CALIFORNIA - JUNE 17: Kulture Kiari Cephus and Cardi B attend the Teyana Taylor "The Album" Listening Party on June 17, 2020 in Beverly Hills, California. (Photo by Rich Fury/Getty Images for Def Jam Recordings)
There were plenty of notable stars in attendance at Teyana Taylor’s Juneteenth listening party for her new album on June 18, but it was Cardi B’s daughter Kulture who stole the show with her red carpet debut.The almost two-year-old hit up the Beverly Hills event alongside the likes of Lena Waithe, Cynthia Erivo and Winnie Harlow. Her adorable rainbow print dress was complemented with Nike Air Force 1s and a yellow bow, not to mention a bit of bling in the form of earrings and bracelets. Topping off the look? A pacifier, naturally.[video_embed id='-1']RELATED: Baby loves to dance to Cardi B on Alexa[/video_embed]“When I see you I know I did something right for a blessing like you,” Cardi B. posted on Instagram alongside photos of Kulture, in which the tot is also wearing a white fur jacket. Later the mom also posted a photo in which she’s sporting a matching yellow ensemble and holding Kulture in her arms. “You gotta bare with me,” she captioned the post.
 
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You gotta bare with me

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Teyana Taylor, who is the mother to four-year-old Junie, is expecting her second child; she made the announcement in the music video for “Wake Up Love.” In the meantime her fourth album, The Album, was officially released on June 19. The 23-song track is the official follow-up to her 2018 release KTSE, and in it she opens up about and celebrates the Black experience.“There's times where I would be up and I would just watch my husband and my daughter sleep and I'd just cry, because what I'm looking at is not only my family, but past the wealth and fame, I'm looking at a Black child and a Black man first,” she penned in an essay for Billboard. “I could have lost them yesterday, I could lose them today, I could lose them tomorrow and the same thing for me. So that's where my mindset is for me. It's a lot for me to take all that in to see what people are going through on social media and outside and be a pregnant Black woman.”The singer also revealed why she chose Juneteenth—the day of celebration in the Black community in honour of the day slaves were declared free in the state of Texas after the Civil War—for her album release.“With releasing the album on Juneteenth, it's important because if you noticed the lead singles that I led with were "Made It" and "We Got Love." So I've always been here,” she writes. “I've always been about us being celebrated and celebrating my culture and my people. For everything to happen, from my album getting delayed and it falls perfectly on Juneteenth, yes, it's a celebration.”[video_embed id='1979612']BEFORE YOU GO: Jagmeet Singh removed from House of Commons after calling Bloc MP a racist[/video_embed]

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